Can You Solve A Paris MoreDoor Mystery? Name That Place! - IMRAN™
Can You Solve A Paris MoreDoor Mystery? Name That Place! - IMRAN™
Although my literary tastes are extremely esoteric, in fiction, with the lack of time, I can only make time for political action thrillers of the Robert Ludlum type. But, I occasionally enjoy a good murder mystery movie, like "Knives Out" which I had enjoyed not too long ago. This is none of those things.
When I travel, I try to enjoy the city streets of my favorite cities, like Paris. In such walks, I will photograph the usual random cars, or signs, or doors of buildings. So this is a Paris More Door Mystery.
I usually take photos with a Nikon during major trips. Sometimes I will take an extra photo of the same spot with an iPhone, to capture the local GPS coordinates to attach to the primary Nikon photo for geotagging. Or to look up more details on a place later.
During importing Florida sunset photos into Adobe Lightroom, several Nikon and iPhone photos got imported together. The import preset automatically assigned my Florida home GPS info to all the photos, so now I have several of Paris which have Apollo Beach embedded in the metadata. This is one such photo.
Based on timestamps I know it was taken during a 30 minutes casual walk from the Invalides area to the Orsay Museum, but on one of the smaller streets. It was late afternoon on a late spring weekend, so there was no activity captured in the photo to give me a hint.
It is not even that great a building or photo as you can see. The panorama stitched from 3 handheld photos taken very close to the building make it look distorted. But think of it as OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder LOL) that is driving me to find an answer to what this building is.
I see Latin-like words on it. They seem to be "bona aedification tres habet conditiones comoditatem fermit atem et delectation em." The very rough translation suggests this could be a school or architecture design place. The translation is not great because it is hard to tell if the Latin words are one or two words where the pillars have angled joints.
I see the number 14 on the pillars, but I also see an 8 embedded on the facade. My Bing and Google Maps exploration did not answer my question about what and where this building is exactly located.
Can you solve the More Door mystery?
© 2020 IMRAN™
Can You Solve A Paris MoreDoor Mystery? Name That Place! - IMRAN™
Can You Solve A Paris MoreDoor Mystery? Name That Place! - IMRAN™
Although my literary tastes are extremely esoteric, in fiction, with the lack of time, I can only make time for political action thrillers of the Robert Ludlum type. But, I occasionally enjoy a good murder mystery movie, like "Knives Out" which I had enjoyed not too long ago. This is none of those things.
When I travel, I try to enjoy the city streets of my favorite cities, like Paris. In such walks, I will photograph the usual random cars, or signs, or doors of buildings. So this is a Paris More Door Mystery.
I usually take photos with a Nikon during major trips. Sometimes I will take an extra photo of the same spot with an iPhone, to capture the local GPS coordinates to attach to the primary Nikon photo for geotagging. Or to look up more details on a place later.
During importing Florida sunset photos into Adobe Lightroom, several Nikon and iPhone photos got imported together. The import preset automatically assigned my Florida home GPS info to all the photos, so now I have several of Paris which have Apollo Beach embedded in the metadata. This is one such photo.
Based on timestamps I know it was taken during a 30 minutes casual walk from the Invalides area to the Orsay Museum, but on one of the smaller streets. It was late afternoon on a late spring weekend, so there was no activity captured in the photo to give me a hint.
It is not even that great a building or photo as you can see. The panorama stitched from 3 handheld photos taken very close to the building make it look distorted. But think of it as OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder LOL) that is driving me to find an answer to what this building is.
I see Latin-like words on it. They seem to be "bona aedification tres habet conditiones comoditatem fermit atem et delectation em." The very rough translation suggests this could be a school or architecture design place. The translation is not great because it is hard to tell if the Latin words are one or two words where the pillars have angled joints.
I see the number 14 on the pillars, but I also see an 8 embedded on the facade. My Bing and Google Maps exploration did not answer my question about what and where this building is exactly located.
Can you solve the More Door mystery?
© 2020 IMRAN™